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Ancestors of David Alexander Neibaur


Generation No. 6


      32. Alexander Neibaur, born January 08, 1808 in Ehrenbreitstein, Nassau, Prussia25; died December 15, 1876 in Salt Lake City, UT. He was the son of 64. Joseph Nathan Neubauer and 65. Rebecca Peretz. He married 33. Ellen Breakel September 16, 1834 in Chancler, Preston, Lancashire, England26.

      33. Ellen Breakel, born February 28, 1811 in Preston, Lancashire, England; died December 14, 1870 in Salt Lake City, Utah. She was the daughter of 66. Richard Breakel and 67. Alice Bannister.

Notes for Alexander Neibaur:
[Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah, p.1065]

Neibaur, Alexander (son of Nathan Neibaur and Rebecca Peretz Samuel of Ehrenbreitstein, near Coblenz, Hessen-Nassau, Prussia). Born Jan. 8, 1808, in Ehrenbreitstein. Came to Utah Sept. 20, 1848, Brigham Young company.

[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.21]

Individual: Neibaur, Alexander
Birth date: Jan 8, 1808
Birth place: PRUS
CD# 100

[History of Utah by Orson F. Whitney - Volume 1 - Chapter XXIV 1852-1853]

Alexander Neibaur, surgeon-dentist from Berlin and Liverpool, informs the public that he examines and extracts teeth, besides keeping constantly on hand a supply of the best matches, manufactured by himself.

[History of Utah by Orson F. Whitney - Volume 2 - Chapter I 1861-1862]

Sons of Vulcan, Jonathan Pugmire; edge tool makers, Robert Daft; gun and locksmiths, James Hague; tin and copper smiths, Dustin Amy; carpenters and joiners, Miles Romney; wheelwrights, Samuel Bringburst; cabinet makers, carvers, turners and upholsterers, William Bell; coopers, Abel Lamb; stone cutters, Charles Lambert; masons, plasterers, brick and adobe makers, John H. Rumel; paintyers and glaziers, Edward Martin; tanners and curriers, James Robson; boot and shoemakers, Edward Snelgrove; saddle and harness makers, Francis Platt; wool carders, Theodore Curtis; weavers, Thomas Lyon; dyers, J. Evans; tailors, Claude Clive; hatters, Lyman Leonard; potters, John Eardley; millers, John Neff; bakers and confectioners, William L. Binder; butchers, Charles Taylor; rope-makers, William A. McMaster; comb-makers, William Derr; match-makers, Alexander Neibaur; basket-makers, Daniel Comomile; broom-makers, Moses Wade; tobacco manufacturers, Benjamin Hampton; artists William V. Morris; engravers, David McKenzie; jewelers, Charles Kidgell; silversmiths, John Rogers; watch and clock makers, Octave Ursenbach; hair-dressers, Johjn Squires; quarrymen, Adam Sharp; lumber men and sawyers, Edmund Ellsworth.


[Received in an E-Mail from Beverly Matheson 5/23/98]

In Memory of Alexander Neibaur

Oh! Father; dear Father, must we part
Until we meet on the golden shore?
Oh the grief of our throbbing hearts;
When we knew you had left us forevermore.

Left us, and life's troubles and cares,
Gone to meet thy Father in Heaven
No more sorrows to trouble you there,
Gone and left your children eleven.

We have lived to bless each silvery lock,
That clustered on thy noble brow;
But we, the members of thy little flock,
Ne'er knew how we loved thee till now.

We knew your days with us could not be ong
But when we received your hasty call,
We could but think, Oh! cruel wrong;
That takes one away so dear to us all.

Good bye -- good bye, our dearest friend,
Guide, guard and direct us there.
Help us to follow thee, on to the end
Where we can meet you and Mother dear.

            -- C.A. Fisk



More About Alexander Neibaur:
Fact 5: CD# 10027

  Notes for Ellen Breakel:
Died: December 14, 1870: Wednesday
Deseret News: I9:533

Wednesday: December 14, 1870. Ellen B.B., wife of Alexander Neibaur,
died at her residence on the 14th inst. at 1 p.m. after an illness of
many years.

She was born February 28, 1811 at Longton, Lancashire, England. She
embraced the Gospel in 1837; emigrated to Nauvoo; in common with the
Church, 1841; was expelled in 1846, and arrived in Utah in 1848.

She was an affectionate companion, a true mother and sincere friend.
She left a powerful testimony as a Saint of the Most High. She leaves a
numerous family of children and grandchildren to mourn her loss.

Funeral services will take place in the Thirteenth Ward Chapel, on
Friday, next, at 2 p.m. Friends of the family are invited to attend.
---com.


More About Ellen Breakel:
Burial: December 1870, Salt Lake City, Utah
     
Children of Alexander Neibaur and Ellen Breakel are:
  i.   Joseph William Neibaur, born January 06, 1835 in Preston, Lancashire, England28; died March 02, 1927 in Paris, Bear Lake, Idaho; married Elizabeth Cranshaw January 03, 1857 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah.
  Notes for Joseph William Neibaur:
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.28]

Individual: Neibaur, Joseph William
Birth date: Jan 6, 1835
Birth place: ENG
CD# 100


  More About Joseph William Neibaur:
Burial: March 05, 1927, Paris, Bear Lake, Idaho
Fact 5: CD# 10028

  ii.   Margaret Jane Neibaur, born February 20, 1836 in Preston, Lancashire, England29; died January 29, 1928 in Evans, Box Elder, (Bear River Precinct) Ut; married William Miller June 03, 1856 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT.
  Notes for Margaret Jane Neibaur:
[LDS Biographical Encyclopedia, Andrew Jenson, Vol. 2, p673]

Miller, Margaret Neibaur, wife of William Miller, was born Feb. 20, 1836, at Preston, Lancashire, England, the daughter of Alexander Neibaur and Ellen Breakel. At the age of eight years she was baptized in Nauvoo, Ill., and as a young girl passed through the persecutions and tribulations which the saints underwent prior to their expulsion from Illinois. She remembers all the scenes connected with the martyrdom of the Prophet Joseph and his brother Hyrum. Participating in the general exodus of the saints from Nauvoo, the family traveled to Winter Quarters, where they spent the winter of 1847-48 and the crossed the plains and mountains in Pres. Young's company, arriving in the Valley in the fall of 1848. The family resided in the 13th Ward, Salt Lake City, until Margaret became the wife of Wm. Miller June 5, 1856. Together with her husband she then became a resident of the 12th Ward and subsequently bore her husband fourteen children, nine boys and five girls, of where eight are still living. In 1858 she and her husband participated in the general move south. Sister Miller has been a diligent Temple worker for several years and wherever she has resided she has taken an active part in Church affairs. While residing at Spring Glen for 23 years she was a successful worker in the Ward Sunday school and presided over the Relief Society at that place for 13 years. After the death of her husband in 1910 she changed her residence from Carbon county to Salt Lake City, in order that she might officiate for her dead kindred in the Salt Lake Temple.

[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.32]

Individual: Neibaur, Margaret Jane
Birth date: Feb 20, 1836
Birth place: ENG
CD# 100
Line 1135 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
DEAT PLAC Evans, Box Elder, (Bear River Precinct) Ut

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.



  More About Margaret Jane Neibaur:
Burial: February 02, 1928, Spring Glen, Carbon, Utah
Fact 5: CD# 10029

  Notes for William Miller:
[LDS Biographical Encyclopedia, Andrew Jenson, Vol 2, p.672]

Miller, William, a veteran Elder of the Church, was born June 10, 1832, in Pennsylvania, the son of Eleazer Miller and Rebecca Vanzant. He was baptized in March, 1857, by Bishop Leonard W. Hardy in Salt Lake City while en route to California to see his brother. He participated in the Echo Canyon campain in 1857-58, filled several home missions, helped to locate settlements on Snake river, Idaho, acted for many years as a Ward Teacher, superintendent of Sunday schools, etc. In 1856 he married Margaret Neibaur and in 1882 he married Christine Edholm. By these two wifes he had sixteen children, namely, nine sons and five daughters by his first wife and two sons by his last wife. Three of his sons were killed in the Scofield coal mine disaster. Elder Miller died as a High Priest July 5, 1910, in Castle Valley, Utah, seventy-eight years of age. He lived for a number of years in the Twelfth Ward, Salt Lake City; after that he resided 18 years in Coalville, Summit co., and finally 23 years in Castle Valley, Emery co., Utah.

[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.22731.6]

Individual: Miller, William
Birth date: Jun 10, 1832
Birth place: PA
CD# 100
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.



  More About William Miller:
Burial: July 07, 1910, Spring Glen, Carbon, Ut
Fact 5: CD# 10030

  iii.   Isaac Neibaur, born January 07, 1838 in Preston, England31; died January 02, 1839 in Preston, England32.
  iv.   Isaac Neibaur, born March 30, 1839 in Preston, Lancashire, England33,34; died July 187935; married Emily Holland January 22, 1865 in Utah35.
  Notes for Isaac Neibaur:
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.27]

Individual: Neibaur, Isaac
Birth date: Mar 30, 1839
Birth place: ENG
CD# 100


  More About Isaac Neibaur:
Fact 5: CD# 10036

  More About Emily Holland:
Burial: December 10, 1928, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah37
CD #: April 24, 185537

  v.   Alice Neibaur, born May 22, 1841 in Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois38; died March 21, 1914 in Brigham City, Box Elder, Utah; married Morris David Rosenbaum April 02, 1858 in At Neibaur House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah.
  Notes for Alice Neibaur:
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.22]

Individual: Neibaur, Alice
Birth date: May 22, 1841
Birth place: IL
CD# 100


  More About Alice Neibaur:
Fact 5: CD# 10038

  vi.   Bertha Breakel Neibaur, born December 14, 1842 in Nauvoo, Hancock County, IL39; died May 12, 1912 in Marion, Summit, Utah; married (1) Levi Pangburn November 09, 1869; married (2) Charles Putman Cunningham 1873.
  Notes for Bertha Breakel Neibaur:
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.23]

Individual: Neibaur, Bertha
Birth date: Dec 14, 1842
Birth place: IL
CD# 100


  More About Bertha Breakel Neibaur:
Burial: May 15, 1912, Marion, Summit County, Utah
Fact 5: CD# 10039

  16 vii.   Hyrum Smith Neibaur, born November 30, 1844 in Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois; died October 05, 1935 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah; married (1) Jane Harriett Spriggs January 18, 1867 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT; married (2) Jane Sprague January 18, 1867.
  viii.   Leah Breakell Neibaur, born August 29, 1846 in Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois40; died April 1913; married Adam Milroy Paul May 23, 1866.
  Notes for Leah Breakell Neibaur:
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.31]

Individual: Neibaur, Leah
Birth date: Aug 29, 1846
Birth place: IL
CD# 100


  More About Leah Breakell Neibaur:
Fact 5: CD# 10040

  ix.   Rachel Neibaur, born December 12, 1847 in Winter Quarters, NE41; died December 12, 1847 in Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois.
  Notes for Rachel Neibaur:
Still Born

[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.37]

Individual: Neibaur, Rachel
Birth date: Dec 12, 1847
Birth place: IL
CD# 100


  More About Rachel Neibaur:
Fact 5: CD# 10041

  x.   Sarah Ellen Neibaur, born May 21, 1849 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah42; died June 16, 1945 in Kamas, Summit, Utah; married John O'Driscoll November 16, 1867 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah.
  Notes for Sarah Ellen Neibaur:
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.40]

Individual: Neibaur, Sarah Ellen
Birth date: May 21, 1849
Birth place: UT
CD# 100

[D.U.P. Obituray Scrapbook]
Kamas Valley Fetes Mrs. O'driscoll On Anniversary

KAMAS, Utah, June 2.--Kamas Valley recently paid high tribute to one of its most elderly residents and pioneer mothers, Mrs. Sarah Ellen Neibaur O'Driscoll, who was 89 years old on May 21.
Mrs. O'Driscoll was born in Salt Lake City on May 21, 1849, just two years after arrival of the original pioneers, a daughter of Alexander and Ellen B. Neibaur.
She was married to John O'Driscoll on Nov. 16, 1867, and moved to Kamas Valley in June, 1869.
She is a highly respected pioneer builder of this section, and the mother of 12 children, five of whom are living.
She is proud of the fact that she has 38 grandchildren and 66 great grandchildren, as well as one great great grandchild.


  More About Sarah Ellen Neibaur:
Burial: June 20, 1945, Kamas, Summit, Utah
Fact 5: CD# 10042

  Notes for John O'Driscoll:
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.24522.34]

Individual: O'driscoll, John
Birth date: Dec 21, 1845
Birth place: S.AFR
CD# 100


  More About John O'Driscoll:
Fact 5: CD# 10043

  xi.   Rebecca Ann Neibaur, born March 30, 1851 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT44; died July 02, 1928 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah44; married Charles Wilson Nibley March 30, 1869 in Logan, Cache, UT44.
  Notes for Rebecca Ann Neibaur:
[LDS Biographical Encyclopedia, Andrew Jenson, Vol. 2, p.675]

Nibley, Rebecca Neibaur, a member of the General Board of Relief Societies, and the wife of Bishop Charles W. Nibley, was born in the dawn of Utah's history - March 30, 1851, in Salt Lake City, Utah. Her father, Alexander Neibaur, was the first man of Jewish blood to enter the waters of baptism in this dispensation, and he was the friend of the Prophet Joseph Smith, as of Pres. Brigham Young and the other great and good men and women who composed the founders of the Church. Her mother, Ellen Breakel, was of English birth, and the parents had emigrated to Nauvoo in the brightest period of that beautiful city's history. With the body of the Church they cameWest to make new homes in the forbidding valleys of the Wasatch, and their children were born into the common heritage of pioneer poverty and struggle. Rebecca remembers vividly the grasshopper devastation, and the food scarcity which followed. Bran bread was bread if only there was enough of it. Hungry children are not easily satisfied, yet these were taught not to murmur, nor to be dependent on any one but themselves and their Heavenly Father. Privation and hardship often dulls the senses; yet it sometimes quickens the faith; these pioneers were of the stock that never turns back when once the plough handle has been grasped. When the general move South came in 1858, owing to the entrance into the valleys of Johnson's army, Rebecca was a small child, but she helped to drive the pigs down, much to her dismay. Her memory is still crowded with the scenes of incidents of that sojourn in the southern city of Provo, where the most of the saints camped for a short time. She was baptized March 30, 1859, on the anniversary of her birthday, in City Creek, just above the Kimball mill, by John Woolley. That day, by-the-way, has been a red-letter day - or otherwise - for Rebecca Nibley. Many events have happened to mark her life's course on that fateful day. Rebecca Neibaur was a keen-witted, sunny-dispositioned, lively, magnetic, popular girl, with a host of freinds and many admirers. She was "Beck" to her friends, and they numbered nearly all the city, while she is still "Aunt Beck" to her numerous friends today. She was gay, full of repatee and laughter, and was "good company" as that phrase went. She was never worsted in an argument or found beaten in any sort of wordy skirmish; with her own colors flying and banners aloft, her witty sallies left her antagonists behind her silenced and dismayed. She had small schooling at books and schools, but what she lacked in peragogical knowledge she amply made up in native intelligence and quick apprehension. Her intellect is of the practical order, yet keen to a repier's point in that quick comprehension which makes of the men and women of today "self-made." Withal, this brilliant girl was filled to the brim with a burning testimony of the truth of the gospel bequeathed to her by her devoted parents. She knew to the core of her heart that Joseph Smith was a prophet of God, and nothing ever so filled her soul with joy as to hear that testimony borne by another, or to voice it herself. That testimony has never left her, nor been overlaid with the cares of home life, the joys of travel, or the pleasures of society. To laborfor the cause of Truth, in whatever field her powers and calling may lie, is still the greatest happiness known to this faithful woman. Rebecca was present and stood near Pres. Brigham Young when he drove the last spike in the Utah Central Railroad in Salt Lake City, Jan. 10, 1870, she being in the capital on a visit from Brigham City. The girl was assisting her sister, Mrs. Morris Rosenbaum, at Brigham City, in the large boarding house which that thrifty Hebrew, Mr. Rosenbaum, kept for the men who were engaged in the final work on the railroads. There sat at that boarding table such men as Collis P. Huntingdon, O. J. Salisbury, Col. Grey, Col. Hurd, with Governor Leland Stanford, and many others not so well known, but of local repute. The merry-voiced girl was popular with all the boarders, and on one occasion she received an offer of marriage, which was repeated at sundry and several occasions from one of the men just mentioned. But "Beck" Neibaur was a "Mormon", first, last, and all the time. Her suiters offered her gold, houses, residence away from her people etc., upon which the girl arose to her small height and announced her loyalty to her father, her faith, and her people. She was not again molested on that point. But Governor Stanford had marked well the swift-footed, capable, careful, baby-loving, prudent girl, and he entreated her on numerous occasions to accept a position in his family as companion to his children. He too painted rosy pictures of life away from her people and in the great world west of the Valley, but "Beck" had built her house upon the rock; and when the winds came and the storms of wntreaty tried to batter down her citadel, her rooftree never shock, her knees never faltered. It might be threats, it might be coaxing, but the girl simply tossed them all aside as things of no moment. She was a "Mormon," and she would marry one of her own people or no one. And when she was rallied by Gov. Stanford on the possibility of being the wife of a man who would take other wives, she answered, decisively, "Sir, I would not marry a man who had not the courage of his convictions, and who would not enter into that celestial order of marriage." On March 30th, 1869 - fateful day - she was married in the old Endowment House, by Pres. Daniel H. Wells, to Charles Wilson Nibley, a young and promising Scotchman, already an important figure among the young men of northern Utah. The young couple married and moved to Brigham City, where they lived for four years, and where their first two children were born, and the little daughter died. From there they moved up to Logan, in 1873, remaining there for twenty tyears, and then moved to Baker City, Oregon, in 1893; while living there Sister Nibley was chosen president of the first Relief Society organized in that State, March 30, 1896; she filled that position for seven years and then moved to Salt Lake City in 1903. Mrs. Nibley is the mother of ten children, four girls and six boys. All her living children are married and all have been married in the Temple. The sons have filled missions and are active men in their various fields of endeavor. She has buried two children in Logan, and one in Brigham City. Her husband entered into the celestial order of marriage, his first marriage occurring in that fateful date of March 30, 1880. Before this, however, Elder Nibley went on a mission to England, leaving her with two children. She had a piece of hay land, a cow, some chickens, and a pig; and like the brave woman she was, she managed, by carefully husbanding her resources, to get through with the whole term without contracting one cent of debt. In fact, when he returned, the three hundred dollars which had been paid the little wife on a debt owed her husband was still hidden in the clock where it had reposed untouched since its receipt. Durning that time, the young wife took care of her own garden, planted, harrowed, hoed and harvested her vegetables and fruits, even growing her own winter potatoes. Since the blessing of prosperity has visited their home Sister Nibley has taken many pleasant and profitable trips both east and west. She was at the Salt Lake and Logan Temple dedications, has worked for her dead in both Temples, and was at the dedication of the Canada Temple site in June, 1913. When she removed to Salt Lake City in 1903, she located in her present comfortable home opposite the Temple Block to the west. Soon after this (October, 1909) she was placed upon the General Board of the Relief Society, which position she still occupies to the credit of herself and the great benefit of that body of women. One of her important activities is her chairmanship of the committee for the Relief Society Home, as general manager and active head of that splendid institution. She is also at present a member of the Relief Society advisory and finance committee. All in all, Sister Nibley is a woman of good executive ablility, of pleasing presence, with much latent talent which only lacked opportunity to develop into wider fields of activity. She is hospitable, a delightful traveling companion, prudent and economical, with a broad charity which is exercised in secret, but is none the less generous and tender, a true friend, a faithful mother and an obedient and loyal wife, and above all, she is a saint who knows and lives the gospel according to the light that is within her. Her children show much of their mother's charm and vitality, while her friends know her worth and love her for her noble prudence and her wide sympathy.


[LDS Biographical Encyclopedia, Andrew Jenson, Vol. 4, p.193]

Nibley, Rebecca Neibaur, a member of the General Board of Relief Society from October, 1909, to April, 1921, was born March 30, 1851, in Salt Lake City, Utah, a daughter of Alexander Neibaur and Ellen Breakel. Her father was the first Jew to join the L.D.S. Church. She joined the Relief Society at the age of 16 and was a member for 61 years, serving as visiting teacher, counselor in the presidency and as president of a ward organization, before being called to act on the General Board of Relief Society. She was chairman of the Relief Society Home for women and girls, a member of the Relief Society Magazine Finance Committee when the magazine was established, and a member of the committee which supervised the purchase of linen, contributed by the Board to the L.D.S. Hospital. On March 30, 1869, she was married to Charles W. Nibley and became the mother of ten children. Sister Nibley died July 2, 1928.


  More About Rebecca Ann Neibaur:
Burial: Logan Cemetry, Logan, Cache, Utah

  xii.   Mary Esther Neibaur, born December 07, 1852 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah45; died December 30, 1852.
  Notes for Mary Esther Neibaur:
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.33]

Individual: Neibaur, Mary Esther
Birth date: Dec 7, 1852
Birth place: IL
CD# 100


  More About Mary Esther Neibaur:
Fact 5: CD# 10045

  xiii.   Matilda Isabell Neibaur, born January 30, 1854 in Salt Lake City, Utah; died December 07, 1911 in Salt Lake City, Utah; married (1) John Allen Compton; married (2) William Lorden December 31, 1871 in Salt Lake City, Utah.
  More About Matilda Isabell Neibaur:
Burial: December 10, 1911, Salt Lake City, Utah

  xiv.   Nathan Alexander Neibaur, born September 14, 1855 in Salt Lake City, Utah46; died July 15, 1942; married (1) Lena Borup; married (2) Georgeanna Clyde April 22, 188847.
  Notes for Nathan Alexander Neibaur:
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Apr 20, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.23953.36]

Individual: Neibaur, Nathan Alexander
Birth date: Sep 14, 1855
Birth place: IL
CD# 100


  More About Nathan Alexander Neibaur:
Fact 5: CD# 10048


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